True. I just haven't used AmonRA for a while because it's not supported for the NS4G (or wasn't the last time I looked). Cheers!
True. I just haven't used AmonRA for a while because it's not supported for the NS4G (or wasn't the last time I looked). Cheers!
I'd recommend using acrylic paint with a textile medium. The textile medium will make your acrylic paint washer-safe.
I don't think he's coming off as particularly catty. He's making a pretty legitimate point about how easy this article makes the process sound... when in fact much of the information provided (while very useful) is in most situations actually going to make things worse. Of course, Lifehacker does provide a…
The complicated explanation: each device is assigned a WiMAX hex key to authorise its use of Sprint's network, and by overwriting your device's own hex key, you've given it stupid internet amnesia. HOWEVER, the current version of Clockwork has an option for toggling the WiMAX key state in the backup image.
I have to disagree. With Google+, you don't need to create separate accounts to distinguish your contacts. You just use your circles properly. Have a business circle, have a personal circle. You choose who sees what, both incoming and outgoing. You choose what circles receive which content, on a post-by-post basis.
I think this was done more of necessity than anything else. I love Google+ to death (and think it's full of great implementations of very good ideas) but I've got to admit, a 40% dropoff in public posts over the last couple weeks is sounding a pretty keening death knell. Hopefully this will right the ship and G+ will…
They are the same hardware (minus the obvious CDMA/GSM radios and the WiMAX radio present in the NS4G) but Sprint partnered with Google on Wallet while T-Mobile and AT&T are backing a competitor technology called ISIS.
Because Sprint partnered with Google to develop and rollout Wallet, and T-Mobile and AT&T (along with Verizon) are supporting another, competitive service called ISIS that's much further from release. So the two GSM variants of the Nexus S will be waiting a bit to see Wallet.
Because Sprint partnered with Google to develop and roll-out Wallet. T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon are working on a competitor technology called ISIS, which is further from release.
They're right, though, about Google+ stalling out. Nearly everyone I know who got in has stopped using it... and that's a shame, because it's lights-out awesome. I never really got much into Facebook— just felt poorly designed to me, with a heavy focus on the kinds of social interaction I don't much care for— but…
I like this, but I'm torn. A lot of this stuff is relative junk (and that's OK, because free is free), but the larger issue is that third-party app vendors often don't receive updates in a timely fashion. Paper Camera is just one example of this... both the Amazon App Store and GetJar versions are behind the current…
I'm really hoping the Sea Ray offers a (comparatively small) 4" screen. I used to have an Evo, and now I'm rocking the Nexus S... and honestly I really prefer the 4" display on the Nexus (and not just because SAMOLED destroys LCD six ways from Sunday). Considering we're stuck with 800x480 on WP7 until such time as…
The Galaxy S II uses the Super Amoled Plus display, and yeah, it doesn't rock a PenTile matrix. I got to play with one recently, and it's shit-hot. All the problems present in the first-gen tech (poor text visibility, low red clarity) are fixed... and somehow the contrast levels are even deeper. As much as Samsung's…
LauncherPro is fantastic. But at this point it's almost abandonware. Yeah, it won't matter once Federico puts out the rewrite (one presumes that's why we haven't seen any movement on the current iteration in months)... but for now it's a bit annoying. I've been using the Pro version for about a year, and it's…
I'm with, um... everyone else on the Internet. You definitely didn't make yourself look like any kind of good person, leave alone a good date, with this article, Alyssa.
No, the rumors were always that the Prime would be the first ICS device. Just as the Nexus devices always lead a new version of Android. There's absolutely no way Google would allow a TouchWiz-packing device be the first to bow with ICS... it'd make no sense to launch a new version of Android hidden behind a…
It's not so much the Ice Cream Sandwich part that should bother you so much as it's stock Android against TouchWiz. It's kind of like having a clean bill of health versus having cancer.
Trouble is, the Prime is nearly confirmed to be packing a 4.5" screen, same as the revised European GS2 that was uncovered the other day (and that silly-thin 4.5" thing they released on AT&T a couple months back).
Design-wise, it's extremely similar to Logitech's laser-etched key-toting, three-stage backlight-packing wired Illuminated Keyboard. I picked up one last year and it's absolutely phenomenal.
Wow. That's a huge change. I don't really think it will make a huge difference on the day-to-day, though... but I'm sure it'll certainly be reflected in a huge way in after-hours trading. Google hasn't really changed much since Schmidt moved sideways... I can't imagine Apple's going to be all that different. After…